Fitbit dominates the fitness band market at 67% of all sales. This means that more homes today than ever before have residents who use the Fitbit band. Even President Obama was spotted sporting a Fitbit Surge!

Combine the popularity of the Fitbit with the fact that IFTTT now offers a dedicated Fitbit channel, the Fitbit is an ideal device to experiment with automating your life and your home in ways that you probably never even considered.

If this sounds like you, then you’ll appreciate the Sleep parameters available in the Fitbit IFTTT channel as much as I did. You can create a trigger in IFTTT that goes off after you’ve slept a certain number of hours.

Choose the Sleep duration above option, and type in a number in the Target hours field that’s just slightly beyond the typical number of hours you sleep each night before your alarm goes off.

So, if you usually go to bed at 10 PM and your alarm goes off at 6 AM, then that’s 8 hours. You should be awake within eight hours if all goes well, but you can set up a “panic” alarm to go off if your Fitbit recognizes that you’ve been sleeping for 8.5 hours.

Once you’ve created this trigger, next you can create an action for IFTTT to call your smartphone and wake you up. To set such a call trigger, choose the “Phone Call” alert tool from the list of selections.

Next you can type in the message you want the system to say to you when it calls after you’ve overslept. Make sure to make the message harsh enough so that you actually realize that you’ve overslept and need to get your lazy self out of bed!

This last-ditch phone call has saved me more times than I could count; in one case even saving me from missing a presentation I was supposed to give at an important conference!

Dealing With Lack of Sleep

Just like oversleeping, not getting enough sleep can be a major problem as well. Thankfully, there’s another IFTTT trigger you can set to go off when you haven’t slept long enough.

You can use this trigger to automate all kinds of things that’ll improve your life. For example, in the IFTTT library, you’ll find a recipe to activate the Belkin WeMo Insight Switch connected to your coffee maker.

You may not need a coffee every morning, but when you haven’t had much sleep, it’s nice to have that hot coffee ready and waiting for you in the morning.

The Action recipe lets you embed ingredients from your Fitbit, so you can have the reminder set the day that you woke up, and make the event reminder get scheduled for around the time you want to go to bed. If your Google Calendar is set up to send notifications to your smartphone, you’ll get an instant reminder that you need to get to bed and catch up on your beauty sleep.

Another method to avoid oversleeping is to use the Fitbit sleep duration trigger above to fire up your Philips Hue lightbulbs when you’ve slept long enough and want to wake up.

There are few things that do a better job of waking people up than bright lights (or flashing lights!)

Automate Encouragement For Your Goals

One of the most useful Fitbit triggers you’ll find in IFTTT is the daily goals trigger. The nice thing about it is that it lets you select a specific goal that you’re tracking with your Fitbit, and the exact time of day when you want to reach that goal, or else trigger some action to happen.

The list of goals depends on the goals you’ve enabled in your Fitbit account.

These goals only require a little bit of creativity, and a few very inexpensive WeMo or SmartThings outlet switches, to power on and off devices in your home that encourage you to reach those goals. The key here is that you set a specific time of day for each goal, and this will be the time that all of the resulting actions you configure take place.

You’ll need to create individual recipes for all of the devices you want to turn on and off. Here are some ideas for various ways you can use this recipe to ensure you reach your goals by the end of the day.

If Calories burned is under your goal by 4pm, send SMS asking your wife or husband to cook a low-calorie supper for you if possible.

If Distance Covered is under your goal by 4pm, make the WeMo switch on your treadmill to turn on, and the one on your television to turn off.

In fact, if you’ve bought a few WeMo switches (about $49.99 each) or a Philips Hue starter kit (about $190), the possibilities of automating all kinds of devices (or doing reminders and celebrations with lights) is really limited only by your imagination.

Other IFTTT Recipes For Your Fitbit

Whether you’re looking to automate your home or your life, there are all kinds of cool recipes people have already created on IFTTT that you can use. Here are a few of the best ones.

Many people think that a Fitbit is limited to the features and notifications that you can configure on your Fitbit profile, but as you can see, IFTTT expands the functionality of that little fitness band to a whole new level.

Did you spot any cool automations that you’re going to try out with your Fitbit? Are there any other cool ones you’ve used that you’d like to share with us? Let’s talk about them in the comments section below!

Hi Re Jo - as far as I know it's not possible. The closest trigger is the Daily Activity Summary:

"This Trigger fires every time your Fitbit tracker syncs for the first time today and your previous day's stats are available."

Unfortunately it would likely sync at night or in the morning when you leave for work, so it wouldn't necessarily trigger when you get home. For that I would probably use the Android or iOS trigger that fires whenever your phone connects with your home wi-fi.

Ryan has a BSc degree in Electrical Engineering. He's worked 13 years in automation engineering, 5 years in IT, and now is an Apps Engineer. A former Managing Editor of MakeUseOf, he's spoken at national conferences on Data Visualization and has been featured on national TV and radio.